San Francisco – June 12, 2014 –AppDynamics, the application intelligence leader for the software-defined business, today released The App Attention Span study in partnership with the Institute of Management Studies (IMS) at Goldsmiths, University of London.

The App Attention Span investigated the impact of the increasing importance and use of mobile devices on aspects of people’s behavior, and the corresponding business implications. It reveals that, as people’s attention spans for poor-performing apps shorten, the stakes are high for any business that depends on its website or mobile app.

“With Forrester analysts projecting US mobile commerce sales alone to top $100 billion in 2014, our study underlines the importance of well performing apps,” said Tom Levey, technical evangelist at AppDynamics. “Web and mobile apps now play a prominent role in people’s lives and are central to a huge, growing digital economy.”

“Users experience a lot of negative emotions and frustrations when trying to complete some digital tasks and apps or web pages are slow to load,” said Dr. Chris Brauer, director of innovation, IMS at Goldsmiths, University of London. “Our attention span demands have adapted dramatically to the available technologies.”

Mobile applications alone now account for 25 percent of all internet traffic, with 1.6 billion users worldwide, according to a recent report by Kleiner Perkins. In today’s digital economy, just a few seconds of app or website downtime can have a severe impact on business revenues, reputation and customer satisfaction. AppDynamics’ report, which includes findings from US and UK adult smartphone and tablet owners, suggests that the pressure on businesses on both sides of the pond is set to increase:

65 percent of respondents agreed that their expectations of app performance are increasing over time

Close to half of all respondents are less tolerant of problems with apps or websites than they used to be

Nearly one third of smartphone and tablet owners would change banks if a mobile app wasn’t up to par

The research also shows that users don’t have much patience for poor-performing apps: 86 percent deleted or uninstalled at least one mobile app because of problems with its performance. Yet, the research indicates that smartphone and tablet owners reward businesses that get it right online:

30 percent would spend more money with an organization that had a good mobile app

29 percent would pay more for a product or service if the organization’s app performed better than its competitors’

“In so many ways, for so many businesses, success is now defined by software, as customers expect seamless performance and reliability from all digital services. Tellingly, our study shows that 19 percent of respondents believe they are more loyal to an app than a brand,” said Jyoti Bansal, founder and CEO of AppDynamics. “The bottom line is that organizations must deliver a reliable, consistent mobile experience to grow and protect increasingly important mobile device revenue streams and customer interactions, even under the most demanding situations. Key to this is having the necessary depth of application intelligence in real time so that any problems can be anticipated or rapidly solved.”

Dr. Brauer concludes, saying: “Asset-lite and information-rich organizations are disrupting every industry from taxis to accommodation, retail, entertainment, and logistics. The choice is either to transform into a software-defined business or figure out how you are going to compete with software-defined businesses. No sector of the economy or society will be immune to this challenge.”

Other key findings of The App Attention Span include:

Performance – whether it’s pages taking too long to load or browsing being slow and difficult – is the top frustration of respondents when using mobile apps and websites

65 percent of respondents have experienced a mobile app crash in the past 12 months

For US adults surveyed, 38 percent try another app when faced with a problem, 34 percent stop using the app, and 19 percent complain to friends and family

Nearly three quarters (73 percent) of respondents said that banking apps were the type of apps for which flawless performance is most important, followed by travel booking services and e-commerce apps

For 11 percent of respondents, flawless execution was most important to entertainment apps

27 percent of people surveyed said completing transactions using mobile apps is too complicated and fraught with problems

For regular news and information about AppDynamics and the APM market, like and follow the company on:

For the quantitative part of the study, between 3 and 5 June 2014, independent market researchers, OnePoll, surveyed 1,000 UK and 1,000 US adults, aged 18 years old or more, who own a smartphone, tablet or both.

For the qualitative part, in the week commencing 2 June 2014, Dr Chris Brauer, Senior Lecturer and Director of Innovation in the Institute of Management Studies, and Founder of the Centre for Creative and Social Technologies (CAST) at Goldsmiths, University of London, conducted a rapid qualitative research project involving four case study simulations at the i2 Media research labs based at Goldsmiths, University of London, in-depth follow-up interviews with the case study participants, and extensive desk research.

About AppDynamics
AppDynamics is the Application Intelligence company. With AppDynamics, enterprises have real-time insights into application performance, user performance and business performance so they can move faster in an increasingly sophisticated, software-driven world. AppDynamics’ integrated suite of applications is built on its innovative, enterprise-grade App iQ Platform that enables its customers to make faster decisions that enhance customer engagement and improve operational and business performance. AppDynamics is uniquely positioned to enable enterprises to accelerate their digital transformations by actively monitoring, analyzing and optimizing complex application environments at scale.

AppDynamics reserves the right to change any planned features at any time before making them generally available as well as never making them generally available. Any buying decisions should be made based on features that are currently generally available.